WSJ : ECB’s New Strategy Emphasizes ‘Forceful’ Responses to Inflation Shifts

ECB’s New Strategy Emphasizes ‘Forceful’ Responses to Inflation Shifts
The central bank was criticized for being too slow to respond to a pickup in inflation in 2021

The European Central Bank said it will respond in a “forceful or persistent” manner to big swings in inflation, reflecting the lessons learned from the postpandemic price surge in its latest strategy review.

In common with other central banks, the ECB was criticized for being too slow to respond to a pickup in inflation in 2021 when the annual rate peaked at above 10% by late 2022.

Central bankers concede that they underestimated the effect of interruptions to supply on prices, having been more used to focusing on demand surges as a source of inflation.

“Appropriately forceful or persistent monetary policy action in response to large, sustained deviations of inflation from the target in either direction is important,” the ECB said.

The ECB began to raise its key rate in July 2022 and brought that sequence to an end in September 2023, having increased borrowing costs by 4.5 percentage points.

In a news conference, ECB Chief Economist Philip Lane described that aggregate move as “forceful,” while keeping the key rate at 4% until June 2024 was an example of persistence.

The ECB said the outlook for inflation has become more uncertain as a result of geopolitical and economic fragmentation, the increasing use of artificial intelligence, demographic change, and threats to environmental sustainability.

“A lot of this is in the direction of rolling back globalization,” Lane said.

Lane said that at the time of the last strategic review that began in 2020, globalization was a factor helping keep inflation low.

“We think that what we may be faced with is larger deviations from our 2% target in both directions,” he said.

The bank’s goal will be to ensure that, as events push prices sharply higher or lower, households and businesses don’t respond as if those moves were going to be long-lasting, and demand higher wages or push prices even higher.

“This will help to avoid inflation expectations becoming de-anchored and inflation deviations from the target becoming entrenched,” the ECB said.

Central bankers worry that the surge in prices that followed the Covid-19 pandemic and Russia’s full scale invasion of Ukraine has increased the risk that inflation expectations will quickly shift above or below the 2% target in the event of a new shock.

In a report published Sunday, the Bank for International Settlements said a recent survey of households in 29 advanced and emerging-market economies found that expected inflation is “significantly higher” than the current pace of price increases.

The BIS, which is owned by most of the world’s leading central banks, said the fragmentation of the global economy as tariffs rise could lead to a new breakdown in the supply of goods.

“As the pandemic-era inflation experience made clear, disrupting supply chains could once more lead to upside surprises in inflation,” it warned. “Such a jolt to inflation could rekindle inflation expectations that remain sensitive after the Covid-19-related inflation experience.”

By responding “forcefully” to future shifts in inflation, central bankers hope to reassure households and businesses that they won’t experience a repeat of the postpandemic surge.

In the immediate future, the ECB faces a potential jump in energy prices if the conflict in the Middle East intensifies. In the U.S., the Federal Reserve worries that prices might rise as a result of higher tariffs.

“The [Federal Open Market Committee]’s obligation is to keep longer-term inflation expectations well anchored and to prevent a one-time increase in the price level from becoming an ongoing inflation problem,” Fed Chair Jerome Powell last week told the House Financial Services Committee.

FT : Nissan seeks payment delays for suppliers as it plans to cut 250 jobs at Su

Nissan seeks payment delays for suppliers as it plans to cut 250 jobs at Sunderland
Japanese carmaker’s efforts to shore up cash position come amid sweeping turnaround plan

Nissan has sought to delay payments to suppliers and plans to cut 250 jobs at its UK plant, as the Japanese carmaker pushes forward with sweeping restructuring measures to overcome a financial crisis.

The Yokohama-based producer of the Rogue, Leaf and Qashqai models said on Monday that some parts suppliers had been asked to accept delayed payment with interest, which would support the company’s near-term cash flow.

The car manufacturer also plans to reduce headcount by 250 people at its Sunderland plant in northern England through a voluntary redundancy scheme as part of a global push to cut 20,000 positions.

Nissan has insisted that its cash pile and credit lines of ¥2.2tn ($15bn) are robust enough to implement job cuts and plant closures but the latest moves are expected to reinforce investor concerns about its financial condition.

The company has forecast negative free cash flow for its automotive business to expand from ¥243bn at the end of March to ¥550bn by the end of June.

“With their full agreement, we have incentivised some of our valued suppliers to collaborate under more flexible payment terms, at no cost to them, in order to support free cash flow,” the company said in a statement.

Nissan’s move to shore up its cash position was first reported by Reuters. It is not uncommon in the auto industry to ask for payment delays to suppliers.

The measures come as part of a sweeping turnaround plan launched by Nissan’s new chief executive Ivan Espinosa, which involves shutting seven out of 17 plants and accelerating the company’s decision-making.

Sunderland is unlikely to be one of the factories to be closed. The cutting of 250 positions compares with 6,000 jobs at the plant and is intended to increase efficiency.

“In order to support future competitiveness, this week we are beginning discussions with some of our team in Sunderland about the opportunity to voluntarily leave Nissan,” the company said. “Our Sunderland plant remains at the forefront of our electrification strategy.”

The group has forecast an operating loss of ¥200bn in the three months ending in June and has signalled that heavy restructuring costs will result in another year of losses.

Figures released last week showed that Nissan sales maintained their downward trajectory in May, slipping 6 per cent to about 256,000 units globally.

Additional US tariffs on car imports of 25 per cent after Donald Trump entered the White House have compounded the pain for Nissan and other Japanese automakers.

Trump told Fox News on Sunday that he was determined to keep tariffs on Japanese cars because of the small number of vehicles exported from the US to Asia’s second-largest economy.

>>> US Early premarket gappers

Early premarket gappers
  • Gapping up:
    • JNPR +8.5%, HPE +7.0%, FSLR +4.8%, RERE +3.2%, AUPH +2.6%, META +2.0%, FTV +2.0%, SPWR +1.7%, INTC +1.6%, GOOG +1.5%, APLD +1.4%, KKR +1.1%, KRE +0.8%, EWC +0.7%, AAPL +0.7%, NVDA +0.7%
  • Gapping down:
    • HMC -2.1%, TM -1.4%, TSLA -1.3%, SWK -1.3%, THC -0.9%, STLA -0.8%, PDD -0.7%

>>> US Research Calls I

Research Calls I
  • Upgrades
    • Consolidated Edison (ED) upgraded to Outperform from Neutral at Mizuho, tgt $107
    • Disney (DIS) upgraded to Buy from Hold at Jefferies, tgt $144
    • Kratos Defense (KTOS) upgraded to Buy from Neutral at Goldman, tgt $52
    • Linde (LIN) upgraded to Buy from Neutral at Citigroup, tgt $535
    • Medtronic (MDT) upgraded to Peer Perform from Underperform at Wolfe Research
    • Oracle (ORCL) upgraded to Buy from Hold at Stifel, tgt $250
    • Vor Bio (VOR) upgraded to Buy from Neutral at H.C. Wainwright, tgt $3
  • Downgrades
    • ProKidney (PROK) downgraded to Underperform from Neutral at BofA Securities, tgt $1
    • Tronox (TROX) downgraded to Underperform from Market Perform at BMO Capital, tgt $3
  • Others
    • Aardvark Therapeutics (AARD) initiated with a Buy at H.C. Wainwright, tgt $40
    • AeroVironment (AVAV) initiated with a Buy at Goldman, tgt $301
    • American Healthcare REIT (AHR) initiated with an Outperform at Scotiabank, tgt $42
    • Amplify Energy (AMPY) resumed with a Buy at Alliance Global Partners, tgt $6
    • Amrize (AMRZ) initiated with a Buy at Berenberg, tgt $64
    • Amrize (AMRZ) initiated with a Hold at Jefferies, tgt $52.50
    • Aytu BioPharma (AYTU) initiated with a Buy at Ascendiant, tgt $12
    • Brookfield Asset Management (BAM) initiated with a Neutral at Piper Sandler, tgt $60
    • Capricor Therapeutics (CAPR) initiated with a Buy at Alliance Global Partners, tgt $20
    • Candel Therapeutics (CADL) assumed with a Buy at H.C. Wainwright, tgt $23
    • CAE (CAE) assumed with a Buy at Goldman, tgt $33
    • Circle (CRCL) initiated with an Underperform at Autonomous, tgt $147
    • Circle (CRCL) initiated with a Buy at Needham, tgt $250
    • Circle (CRCL) initiated with an Underweight at JPMorgan, tgt $80
    • Circle (CRCL) initiated with a Perform at Oppenheimer
    • Circle (CRCL) initiated with an Outperform at Bernstein, tgt $230
    • Circle (CRCL) initiated with an Overweight at Barclays, tgt $215
    • Circle (CRCL) initiated with a Neutral at Goldman, tgt $83
    • Compass (COMP) assumed with a Buy at BTIG Research, tgt $9
    • Dutch Bros (BROS) initiated with an Outperform at CICC, tgt $80
    • Driven Brands (DRVN) initiated with a Buy at BTIG Research, tgt $22
    • Edgewise Therapeutics (EWTX) initiated with a Buy at H.C. Wainwright, tgt $42
    • First Busey (BUSE) initiated with a Market Perform at Hovde Group
    • KKR (KKR) initiated with an Overweight at Piper Sandler, tgt $150
    • Leonardo DRS (DRS) initiated with a Buy at Goldman, tgt $49
    • Mister Car Wash (MCW) initiated with a Neutral at BTIG Research
    • Planet Labs (PL) assumed with a Neutral at Goldman, tgt $4.60
    • Rocket Lab (RKLB) assumed with a Neutral at Goldman, tgt $27
    • SailPoint (SAIL) initiated with an Overweight at Cantor Fitzgerald, tgt $29
    • Starbucks (SBUX) initiated with an Outperform at CICC, tgt $100
    • Virgin Galactic (SPCE) assumed with a Neutral at Goldman, tgt $3
    • Waystar (WAY) initiated with an Outperform at Mizuho, tgt $48
    • Wells Fargo (WFC) initiated with an Outperform at KGI Securities, tgt $93

>>> Senate voted 51-49 on procedural motion to advance large reconciliation bill

Senate voted 51-49 on procedural motion to advance large reconciliation bill to a full Senate vote tonight; House expected to vote Wednesday. The bill includes extension of 2017 tax cuts, spending cuts (Medicaid and green energy spending), deregulation, energy reform, immigration reform, and a debt ceiling increase of $5 trillion (614.91)
  • The bill extends 2017 tax cuts for all income levels with an increased standard deduction. Tax cuts will be made permanent.
  • The bill eliminates taxes on tips and overtime.
  • The bill increases deductions for seniors on Social Security by $4000.
  • The bill makes permanent write-offs for business interest expenses and R&D.
  • The bill provides $170 billion for border security, construction of a border wall, and deportations.
  • The bill phases out solar and wind tax credits beginning in 2026 and will be completely phased out by 2028. The bill will require solar or wind projects to be in service by the end of 2027 to qualify for tax credits. Nuclear power credits will last until 2036. Hydrogen tax credits will be phased out in 2028.
  • The bill starts Medicaid work requirements beginning in December of 2026. The Medicaid provider tax will drop to 3.5% by 2032.
  • The bill creates a $25 billion fund for rural hospitals.
  • The bill makes auto loan interest tax deductible.
  • The bill raises the debt ceiling by $5 trillion.
  • The bill raises the state and local tax deduction to $40,000 for people making $500K or less. SALT cap will go back to $10K after 5 years.
  • The bill makes changes to the IRS free tax filing program, pending review by a task force.
  • The bill includes tax on college endowments and private foundations.
  • The bill includes reforms for how pharmacy benefit managers do business with the government.
  • The bill creates a new savings account for children, and $1000 of funding will be provided.
  • The bill provides new tax credits for nuclear energy.
  • The bill will provide billions for the construction of the "Golden Dome" missile defense shield.
  • The bill raises the child tax credit to $2200 from $2000.
  • The bill provides additional money for air traffic control and some other defense programs.

Full Bill Text : https://www.budget.senate.gov/imo/media/doc/the_one_big_beautiful_bill_act.pdf

Deficit Impact: The CBO said that the Senate bill will add $3.3 trillion to deficits over the next 10 years. The CBO "estimates that enacting the substitute amendment would increase by 11.8 million the number of people without health insurance in 2034. That amount includes an estimated 1.4 million people without verified citizenship, nationality, or satisfactory immigration status who would no longer be covered in state-only funded programs in 2034."
What's Next? The Senate will start "vote-a-rama" today at 9:00 ET, which is an unlimited series of amendments. The vote on the final passage of the bill will likely be this evening. Senators Thom Tillis and Rand Paul will vote against it, meaning Republicans can only lose 1 more vote. The House Rules Committee will meet Tuesday night, setting up a final House vote on Wednesday in order to meet President Trump's July 4th deadline for passage. Elon Musk reiterated his opposition to this bill over the weekend.
Related stocks: TAN, FSLR, SPWR, CSIQ, SUN, NEE, GEV, CWEN, CHPT, EVGO, BLNK, TSLA, CXW, GEO, UNH, HUM, CNC, CVS, ALHC, MOH, CI, ELV, THC, UHS, CYH, HCA, HRB, INTU, SAH, CVNA, AN, PAG, GPI, NLR, CCJ, URA, CAE, GD, LMT, NOC, LHX, LIN, APD, PLUG, BE

FT : WHSmith takes haircut on price tag for high street business

WHSmith takes haircut on price tag for high street business
Modella Capital renegotiates price downwards after weak trading at UK retailer

The buyer of WHSmith’s high street business has renegotiated the price downwards after trading at the chain deteriorated in recent weeks.

WHSmith now expects to receive gross cash proceeds of up to £40mn from the sale to Modella Capital, compared with the £52mn it had projected when it first announced the deal on March 28, the company said in a stock exchange statement Monday.

The renegotiation with Modella, which plans to change the name of the 233-year-old business to TG Jones, comes after “the future of the high street business under a change of ownership has led to a more cautious outlook amongst stakeholders”, WHSmith said in a statement.

The sale has now completed.

>>> Europe : Brokers Upgrades & Downgrades - 30th of June 2025 V2(+)

>>> Up
* Allegro Raised to Overweight at Morgan Stanley; PT 40 zloty
* CTP Raised to Buy at Deutsche Bank (+)
* Disney Raised to Buy at Jefferies; PT $144
* Gecina Raised to Buy at Deutsche Bank (+)
* Holcim Raised to Buy at Jefferies; PT 65 Swiss francs
* Kardex Raised to Buy at Kepler Cheuvreux (+)
* Liontrust Raised to Add at Peel Hunt; PT 435 pence
* NCC Raised to Buy at SEB Equities; PT 202 kronor
* Pennon Raised to Buy at Deutsche Bank (+)
* Salmar Raised to Buy at Arctic Securities; PT 500 kroner
* Storebrand Raised to Buy at Arctic Securities; PT 156 kroner (+)
* Terna Raised to Buy at Deutsche Bank (+)
* Whirlpool Raised to Buy at Longbow; PT $145

>>> Down
* Centrica Cut to Neutral at JPMorgan; PT 167 pence
* Gjensidige Cut to Hold at Pareto Securities; PT 260 kroner (+)
* Huhtamaki PT Cut to 28 euros from 40 euros at Berenberg
* Ibstock Cut to Neutral at Davy; PT 167 pence (+)
* IONOS Group SE Cut to Underperform at BNPP Exane (+)
* Man Group Cut to Add at Peel Hunt; PT 191 pence
* Michelin Cut to Add at AlphaValue/Baader (+)
* Moncler Cut to Neutral at Goldman; PT 57 euros
* Nordex Cut to Hold at Kepler Cheuvreux (+)
* Porvair Cut to Add at Peel Hunt; PT 860 pence (+)
* RTL Cut to Hold at M.M. Warburg (+)
* Skanska Cut to Hold at SEB Equities; PT 240 kronor
* Troax Cut to Hold at SEB Equities; PT 160 kronor
* Uniqa Cut to Accumulate at Erste Group; PT 13 euros

>>> Initiation
* Amrize Rated New Buy at Berenberg; PT $64
* Amrize Rated New Hold at Jefferies; PT 44.50 Swiss francs
* Brenntag Rated New Buy at Baptista Research; PT 80.80 euros
* Croda Rated New Reduce at Kepler Cheuvreux; PT 2,840 pence (+)
* CTS Eventim Rated New Hold at Baptista Research; PT 112.90 euros
* Evonik Rated New Buy at Baptista Research; PT 26.20 euros
* GEA Group Rated New Hold at Baptista Research; PT 64.40 euros
* Hensoldt Rated New Underperform at Baptista Research
* Hochtief Rated New Hold at Baptista Research; PT 184.30 euros
* Leonardo DRS Rated New Buy at Goldman; PT $49
* Lufthansa Rated New Hold at Baptista Research; PT 8.20 euros
* Murapol Rated New Hold at Wood & Company; PT 44 zloty (+)
* Pony AI ADRs Rated New Outperform at GuoSen; PT $15.25
* Starbucks Rated New Outperform at CICC; PT $100
* WDP Rated New Buy at Deutsche Bank; PT 25 euros (+)
* Zalando Rated New Buy at Jefferies; PT 33 euros

>>> Call
* Boeing Wins Buy Rating as Redburn Sees ‘Healthier’ Company
* Centrica Downgraded at JPMorgan, Upside More Limited From Here
* Holcim Well Placed to Capture Upside, Jefferies Raises to Buy
* WH Smith Sees Lower Cash Proceeds From UK High Street Ops Sale (+)

FT : Smelters say they are losing power battle with Big Tech

Smelters say they are losing power battle with Big Tech
US and European industry executives say high electricity prices are holding back efforts to rekindle domestic industry

High electricity costs and an intensifying battle with Big Tech for power are hampering US and European policymakers’ efforts to reshore strategically important metals processing industries, executives say.

Washington and Brussels are offering billions of dollars of taxpayer funds for smelting, processing and mining projects for metals such as copper and aluminium, in order to break China’s stranglehold on the industry. The US has also imposed punitive tariffs on imports in a bid to protect domestic industry.

But senior executives told the Financial Times that more support was needed to make western smelting and processing profitable, while Silicon Valley companies were pushing up the cost of power in the US.

“The most important factor deciding where you actually build a smelter is a long-term competitive power price,” which accounts for about a third of an aluminium smelter’s costs, said Trond Olaf Christophersen, chief financial officer of major aluminium producer Norsk Hydro.

He said that in the US, smelters were vying for electricity contracts with technology groups, which were willing to pay much higher sums in order to develop the data centres that underpin the artificial intelligence revolution.

Big Tech had “a much higher ability to pay for the power compared to an industry like aluminium”, said Christophersen.

One mining industry veteran characterised the dynamic as “not [US aluminium company] Alcoa versus China, but Alcoa versus Google”.

Smelting is an energy-intensive but crucial step in the production of the metals essential for a range of industries from energy to defence and technology. China dominates the sector, with European and US smelters increasingly struggling to compete with its scores of new state-backed factories.

China now controls more than half of the world’s smelting capacity for aluminium, according to the US Geological Survey. It also leads in the processing of other critical minerals, including rare earths and lithium, a trend that has concerned policymakers in the US and Europe.


While smelters required long-term contracts for power at costs of about $40 per megawatt hour, Big Tech companies had penned agreements for upwards of $100 per megawatt hour, the US Aluminium Association said this year.

“Large-load customers remain willing to pay premiums to secure supply,” said consultancy Wood Mackenzie, adding that power prices in the US would “grow steadily in real terms”. Alex Christopher, senior aluminium analyst at market analysis group CRU, said the proliferation of data centres in the US would “only act to drive up competition for limited transmission capacity, forcing up prices”.

The Aluminium Association estimates that a single new aluminium smelter would use about the same amount of electricity each year as a city such as Boston or Nashville.

Although US power prices are below those in Europe, which remain elevated following the energy crisis triggered by the war in Ukraine, average costs last year were almost double those in Canada and significantly higher than in Norway, according to data supplied by Hydro.

Guido Janssen, chief executive of zinc and lead company Nyrstar, said many western smelters were operating on razor-thin margins. “What we need is competitive electricity prices, that’s key,” he said, adding that power prices in Europe were especially high. 

The opening of new smelters in the US and elsewhere would also require government support, such as grants and “de-risking” mechanisms, such as a guaranteed minimum price and buyer, he said. 

Nyrstar is planning to expand its US facilities to enable the production of germanium and gallium — essential for the defence and tech sectors. But Janssen said it would need government funds to be profitable. It is in talks to secure financial support.

The company’s lead smelter in Australia was lossmaking and “we don’t see this changing” without government support, Janssen added.

US authorities are in talks with two companies, Chicago-based Century Aluminum Company and Emirates Global Aluminium from the UAE, over incentives to build the first aluminium smelter in the US since 1980.

EGA said its project was contingent on the company securing a “competitive long-term power supply” and government financial support. Century declined to comment.